Title | Status of the European Green Crab, Carcinus maenas, (aka 5-spine crab) in Oregon Estuaries. Report for 2022 |
Publication Type | Report |
Year of Publication | 2023 |
Authors | Yamada, Sylvia Behrens, Cameron Royer, Shon Schooler, Rebecca Flitcroft, Mitch Vance, Andrea Randall, and Jennifer Fisher |
Pagination | 30 p. |
Institution | Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission. Aquatic Nuisance Species Project |
City | Portland, Or. |
Call Number | OSU Libraries: Digital Open Access |
Keywords | aquatic invertebrates, Coos Bay, crustaceans, El Nino, European green crab = Carcinus maenas, Grays Harbor (Wa.), introduced species, Netarts Bay, Pacific Decadal Oscillation, population count, Salmon River, Siuslaw River, Tillamook Bay, Umpqua River estuary, Willapa Bay (Wa.), Yaquina Bay |
Notes | The invasive European green crab is a voracious predator of bivalve molluscs, small crustaceans and other organisms. It has been present in Oregon since the late 1990s. The population grows when winter waters are warm, as they are during El Niños. Since 2015, however, “recruitment has been good every year. Since green crabs live for 6 years, these recent strong year classes can produce larvae until 2027. . . Now that populations in Oregon, Washington and British Columbia have built up, we have evidence for local production and for larvae sources from a genetically distinct population on Vancouver Island. . .” (from the Executive Summary) |
URL | https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/technical_reports/73666d40c |